Distal middle cerebral artery aneurysm: A proposition of microsurgical management.
Neurochirurgie 2013;
59:121-7. [PMID:
23806761 DOI:
10.1016/j.neuchi.2013.04.007]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/03/2013] [Revised: 04/20/2013] [Accepted: 04/23/2013] [Indexed: 11/22/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
Based on a cohort of patients treated on distal middle cerebral artery (MCA) aneurysm by microsurgical approach, the objectives were to assess the following: the postoperative functional outcome, study the causes of early neurological deterioration and to determine the predictive factors of favourable outcome.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
From a neurovascular prospective database, this retrospective longitudinal study included all the patients treated for cerebral aneurysm located on the distal segment of the MCA over two decades (January 1990-December 2011). The patients were all treated by microsurgical clipping exclusion. Any aneurysm was associated to infectious angiopathy. Data were retrieved from the patient's medical charts. The outcome was analysed twice: during the immediate postoperative period and at 6 months according to the modified Rankin scale. The relative risk was estimated for each variable and the prognostic factors were assessed using a multivariate logistic regression model (P<0.05).
RESULTS
Twenty-eight patients, mean age 40±13.3 years (median: 43 years; range 6-70 years) were divided into the ruptured group (n=20) and unruptured group (n=8). In the ruptured group, the initial clinical status was good (WFNS I-III) in 12 patients (60%) and poor in eight (40%) with an intracerebral haematoma (ICH) in 11 (55%). For both groups, the aneurysm location on the distal MCA decreased at a rate from 64.8% of the insular segment to 25% of the opercular then 10.7% to the cortical. During the hospital stay, neurological deterioration occurred in 16 patients (57.2%). The diagnosed causes were cerebral ischaemia in 10 (35.6%), initial ICH in three (10.7%), hydrocephalus in two (7.1%) and epilepsy in one (7.1%). At 6 months, a favourable outcome (mRS 0-2) was observed in 19 patients (68.1%), a definitive morbidity in seven (24.9%) and death in two (7.2%). Based on the prognostic factors, only the absence of immediate postoperative neurological deterioration was identified as significant for a favourable outcome.
CONCLUSION
These rare cerebral aneurysms resulted in a high proportion of poor initial status related to a frequent ICH. Cerebral ischaemia was a major cause of the immediate neurological deterioration and the absence of immediate neurological deterioration was the single identified prognostic factor.
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